Colorado State football coach Jim McElwain addresses the media about the addition of 29 players to the program, 26 of which signed national letters of intent to play for the Rams. (Loveland Reporter Herald)

I’m gladly helping out on Letter of Intent day today with the Colorado State Rams. Jim McElwain’s news conference to go over the list of players is scheduled for 12:30 p.m.

Interstate 25 permitting, I’ll be there.

The other disclaimer today: I’m not on the college beat and I also am not one of those scribes who either is a knowledgeable recruiting-nik (and there are many who are) or fakes it (and there are many who do). So I’ll generally be reporting who they signed and what they say on this day, the first day the word “commitment” should be used in connection with recruiting.

Here are the recruits CSU disclosed this morning as the Letters of Intent came in and I have been updating this on the fly. The final list includes 22 high school recruits and four from junior colleges, including three already enrolled and on campus. Three of the high school recruits technically didn’t sign letters of intent because they at least initially will be walkons without football scholarships. I’ll mark those with asterisks below.

Initially a Colorado State pledge, safety Jyaz Jones of South Oak Cliff High School in Dallas re-committed to the Rams, according to Rivals.com’s CSU-based website GoldAndGreenNews.com.

Jones (6-foot-1 and 180 pounds) had switched from CSU to Iowa (where his brother plays) during the fall. But Jones missed most of his senior season with a variety of injuries and Iowa recently gained the commitment from a high school safety in Washington D.C.

National signing day is Wednesday, and Jones is expected to join another South Oak Cliff player, defensive end Silvester Hayes, among CSU’s signees.

Entering the 2013 season, Jones had been rated among the top defensive backs in the state of Texas. He has run the sprints for the track team and recorded five interceptions in 2012 as a junior.

If Jones regains his prior form, he likely would be considered one of the prizes of the Rams’ recruiting class.

St. John Boscos Shay Fields rushes during a game on Nov. 22, 2013. (Tracey Romanm, Special to the Press-Telegram)

Second-year coach Mike MacIntyre and his Colorado football program received their first oral commitment from a four-star prospect during the current recruiting cycle Tuesday when wide receiver Shay Fields of Bellflower (Calif.) St. John Bosco picked CU over California and Southern California, according to Rivals.com.

Fields, 5-foot-10 and 170 pounds, caught 82 passes for 1,617 yards and 17 touchdowns last fall as a senior in helping St. John Bosco win the California state championship.

He originally extended an oral commitment to Southern California. But Fields began to have second thoughts after the coaching change at USC and sought out programs that could provide better opportunities for immediate playing time.

Dotson (6-foot, 178 pounds) switched his commitment to Washington after having visited the Huskies this past weekend.

Dotson said the decision to flip his commitment was based on the coaching change at Washington. Dotson had been recruited by new Huskies coach Chris Petersen while Petersen was head coach at Boise State.

Dotson apparently was impressed with Petersen but decided at that time that he would rather play at Colorado than at Boise State.

Colorado State picked up perhaps one of its more important football commitments Thursday when speedster Deron Thompson of Northwest High School in Wichita announced that he will play for the Rams this fall.

NCAA rules prohibit college coaches from speaking about recruits until they are signed. But CSU coach Jim McElwain has said the roster continues to be in need of playmakers with speed.

Thompson, 5-foot-9 and 175 pounds, has been timed in 4.33 for 40 yards, according to Rivals.com. He is ranked by that recruiting website as the ninth-best senior prospect in the state of Kansas.

Colorado men’s basketball coach Tad Boyle enjoys the competition in the Pac-12 and its recruiting hotbeds. But he is not a fan of the long road trips that are becoming more prevalent in that conference.

After outlasting Washington State 71-70 in overtime Wednesday night in Spokane, Wash. (Pullman-based WSU plays at least one game each season in Spokane), the 15th-ranked Buffs do not play again until a Sunday afternoon game against Washington in Seattle.

Colorado (14-2, 3-0 Pac-12) had planned to stay extra time in Spokane before flying across the state to Seattle. The Buffs left Boulder on Tuesday.

FORT COLLINS — Colorado State coach Jim McElwain said he has no concerns about sending out assistant coach Greg Lupfer on the recruiting trail.

Questions about Lupfer’s recent suspension could come up when the Rams’ defensive-line coach sits in the living room of a recruit and talks to the prospect’s parents.

Lupfer was suspended by CSU for two weeks without pay following an ugly verbal altercation with Washington State quarterback Connor Halliday during the first quarter of the Rams’ come-from-behind victory in the Dec. 21 New Mexico Bowl. CSU athletic director Jack Graham also ordered Lupfer to undergo anger management and diversity training at Lupfer’s expense.

Preparing for bowl games is “always hectic,” said Washington State coach Mike Leach, whose Cougars (6-6, 4-5 Pac-12) will face Colorado State (7-6, 5-3 Mountain West) Saturday at the New Mexico Bowl in Albuquerque.

Leach mentioned that there is so much multi-tasking required at this time of the year, including recruiting, preparing a team for a bowl game and making sure the players are ready for final exams.

“It’s funny, but if I talk to friends or relatives, they say, ‘Well, the season’s over, so you’re probably just hanging out, relaxed and are ready to go take a vacation at this bowl,'” Leach said. “They couldn’t be further from the truth.”

The Dec. 21 New Mexico Bowl (against Washington State) will be the first bowl game as a head coach for Colorado State’s Jim McElwain.

But he had served as an assistant coach for teams in nine bowls. That experience helps, he said.

“I’ve been really lucky,” McElwain said. “I’ve been around some great coaches and had the experience of being at some great bowl games. There is no ‘manual’ that says, ‘This is how to do it.’ But probably one of the big things is, don’t try to get too ready for it too early.

“(In early practices) work on your fundamentals … then put the game plan in as normal. The couple of national championships that I was fortunate enough to be in and win (as offensive coordinator at Alabama), we didn’t even bother game planning until the Saturday (of the week before).”

BOULDER — The floor’s yours, Colorado coach Mike MacIntyre told the four senior co-captains. This was the Thursday before the Buffaloes’ final home game of the season, against Southern California on Nov. 23, and Derrick Webb, the senior linebacker from Memphis, took his turn at the front of the team auditorium in the Dal Ward Center.

Webb told his teammates how much they meant to him, “putting it all out there in my senior year,” and thanked them for all the work they had put in, both in the offseason and during the season. He told them how he would like it to end –with two victories, against USC that Saturday and then against Utah on the road, plus a possible bowl game. He said the one thing he could be certain of was the Buffs would play their hearts out in the final regular-season games.

Meanwhile, in Memphis, his mother, Felicia Morris, was preparing to be part of a family junket to Boulder for the Senior Day ceremony. The traveling party would include her husband, Billy Morris; and her father and Derrick’s grandfather, Harold Scott, struggling physically and usually wheelchair-bound in his 70s.

As Derrick’s father figure for most of his life, Scott wanted to be there. “He’s already packed,” Felicia said from Memphis. “He’s called me about 15 times. He asked me, ‘What do you think I’m going to need? I think I’m going to bring my thermos, can I bring my thermos?’ I said that would be OK.”

Derrick Webb’s college football career at CU, which spanned three head coaching tenures and included few wins, was not particularly “glorious” when judged with conventional standards. But what of this standard? His mother already had seen her son walk across the stage on the Folsom Field turf the previous May to receive his bachelor’s degree in communications, and Derrick indisputably had gotten much out of the college and college football experience.

“I’m so proud I’m speechless,” Morris said. “Words can’t explain how proud I am of my son. I just glow every time I look at him.”

This does not have a storybook ending. The Buffaloes lost those final two games and finished 4-8. Webb’s 2013 season and his college football career were over. But he walked away proud of his play and even more so, his attitude.

The captain’s C. University of Colorado

SETTING THE STAGE

In late August, during the first week of the CU fall semester, the Buffs’ annual Rocky Mountain Showdown against Colorado State in Denver was four days away. Webb came off the practice field and squinting in the late summer sunlight, looked ahead. “This is a lot of emotion, going into my last year,” he said. “I can’t let my emotions take over too much and do something crazy with the new rules about head contact. I have to be smart.”

For the second consecutive season, Webb was a Buffaloes co-captain. Unimposing physically and listed at 6-foot and 225 pounds, he held his helmet in one hand and wiped sweat from his forehead with the other. He was about to play his first game for MacIntyre, his third head coach.

“I feel like coach MacIntyre came in and gave everybody an equal opportunity,” Webb said. “I had to earn my spot all over again. That was perfectly fine with me. I want to be pushed. I want to be coached. I don’t want anything handed to me.”

In an era of increased emphasis on Academic Progress Rates and “student-athletes” getting or not getting degrees, Webb was ahead of the curve, with his degree already in hand after the May 10 commencement.

“I was so proud and so grateful to see him walk across that stage,” his mother said. “All that help I got to get him to that stage, as a single mother for so long. I was so blessed that he went in the right direction, and that he had that degree.”

In the fall semester, Webb was taking four classes to add hours to his transcript and remain eligible for football – Introduction to Africana Studies; Women, Sport and Culture; Introduction to Theater; and Latino Poetry. “This is Syllabus Week,” he said, “so maybe we’ll get a little more into the work later this week.”

There was little pressure on him academically, given that he already had graduated, but his choice of classes and Outlook both were serious. Reflective and fond of writing, he was pondering a career in music, perhaps songwriting, if he weren’t able to play pro football.

THE PATH TO BOULDER

Felicia Morris was in the Army for five years, stationed around the country and in South Korea. She was at Fort Riley, Kan., when Derrick was born. Later divorced from his father, she left the service, returned to her hometown, Memphis, and has been working as a clerk for the U.S. Postal Service for 15 years.

Derrick had little contact with his father before he died when Derrick was young. “His grandfather’s been there since the beginning,” said Derrick’s mother, who has been married to Billy Morris since 2010. “He’s been with Derrick since he was 6, taking him to games, being on the sidelines, even trying to coach.”

“Football’s always been a big part of my life,” Derrick said. “I started pretty young, and my mom always stressed I had to get good grades to be able to play.” He laughed. “I had a lot of friends and had a lot of fun, and I got a lot of ‘whippins.’ Yeah, you do dumb stuff. If you would get in trouble at school, you would get a spanking. I had a bit of a talking problem in school. I wasn’t a bad student. I just couldn’t keep my mouth closed. If the teacher had to call my mom, that was a spanking.”

As Webb starred at Memphis’ Whitehaven High School, Colorado was among the schools recruiting him, and he also was looking at Kentucky, Vanderbilt and Mississippi. But he seemed ticketed to go to Tennessee until Phillip Fulmer was fired after the 2008 season. The new staff, under Lane Kiffin, backed off, and by then, Webb had mostly closed the doors to other options. But Colorado had stayed in touch and he made an official recruiting visit to Boulder, and then signed a letter of intent with the Buffaloes in February 2009.

“I was nervous about him going being so far away, of course,” his mother said. “The coaches told me they would take care of him like he was their own son. I got to know Coach (Dan) Hawkins, and I liked him.”

Webb redshirted in 2009. “That was tough because I wanted to play and I wanted to be the youngest player on the field,” he said. “But I was able to get a lot stronger and if I had played as a (true) freshman, I wouldn’t have gotten the experience of playing every down because of the number of seniors we had on that team.”

He played in seven games as a redshirt freshman in 2010, when Hawkins was fired late in the season and eventually replaced by Jon Embree. “I wouldn’t be here if it weren’t for Dan Hawkins,” Webb said. “I really liked coach Embree, too. It was like he was my father or my uncle. He came in, worked us really hard and a lot of the players, players I knew, left or were dismissed from the program. He was trying to set a standard and change the culture around here. It was a new challenge.”

Webb was a starter in Embree’s two seasons, when the Buffs went 3-10 and 1-11, and he led the beleaguered ‘12 Buffs in tackles. The defense was statistically awful, but Webb drew high marks for playing on and remaining as upbeat as possible as the losses mounted. “I was so used to being competitive and when I was in football games that aren’t competitive, it’s tough,” he said. “You don’t want to be embarrassed, but we were. Colorado has such a great tradition, and I felt like we weren’t doing enough.”

The revolving door spun, and in came MacIntyre, the veteran college and NFL assistant who had managed a three-season turnaround in his first crack at head coaching at San Jose State.

In the Colorado State game. University of Colorado

GETTING STARTED

In the opener, the Buffs beat Colorado State 41-27 in Denver. The difference was CU junior quarterback Connor Wood’s two long touchdown passes to junior wide receiver Paul Richardson, making a triumphant return after missing the entire 2012 season following knee surgery. But the defense did its part and also accounted for a touchdown on defensive back Greg Henderson’s 53-yard fumble return.

“We played some great football, made some plays in the clutch,” Webb said. “As long as I’ve been here, I can’t remember too many games where I felt like we won it on defense. I mean in the clutch moments where you need plays, you make plays. We made the plays (against CSU), and we even had a score on defense, so that was exciting.”

Making a tackle against Central Arkansas. Karl Gehring, Denver Post.

The next week, Colorado overcame FCS Central Arkansas 38-24 at Folsom Field. Webb was in a total of 19 tackles in the first two games, and he was playing next to true freshman middle linebacker Addison Gillam, who looked like a future star in the first two weeks. And suddenly, the Buffs were 2-0.

“It’s been a tough last few seasons and the seniors feel like we own it to ourselves to go out and be competitive and leave a winning legacy after all we’ve been through,” Webb said. “It feels good to win in front of the home crowd and it feels good to be 2-0.”

The floods hit Boulder late the next week, and the Buffs got word at a Sept. 13 team meeting that the Fresno State game the next day was at least postponed. (Ultimately, it would be canceled.) “We were getting ready to go to the hotel when they told us,” Webb said. “We were shocked, but we know that other things were more important.” Webb personally was unaffected, given that he lived to the south and east of campus, in the Broker Inn on Baseline Road next to the famous off-campus restaurant/bar, the Dark Horse.

Once known as a top hotel in the area, the Broker Inn now also is used for student accommodations, similar to the Regency complex’s role in Denver for the Auraria Complex. Roughly a half-dozen players were living there during the 2013 season. Webb had a 1986 Grand Marquis back home in Memphis, but decided not to bring it to Boulder with him. To get around, he either walked, got rides, or borrowed a car.

Webb lived alone in his single room, and, yes, it looked like a conventional dorm room — a bed, a dresser, a study desk, a tiny closet that didn’t come close to having enough room for his clothes, which were strewn around the room. The walls were bare. The terms of his athletic scholarship cover the monthly rent payments, but as noted during the debates over whether college football players should be additionally paid, there’s not a lot of pocket money involved.

“I sometimes have a hard time at the end of the month,” Webb said. “Things can come up. Some guys who have cars have to get them fixed, things like that. You have a set amount set aside for food, rent, cell phone bills, all that. One time I got a ticket and I was really struggling at the end of the month because I had to pay for it. A little extra money would make the situation better, maybe give me a little more freedom, maybe do a little more outside the basic essentials. Like taking a girl out on a date. Like taking yourself out to eat once in a while.”

The Buffs finally were back in action on Oct. 7, and the bubble burst in a 44-17 loss to the Beavers at Corvallis. It was 10-3 late in the first half, but the Beavers scored on their final drive of the first half and then on the first possession after the intermission to take control. “I really think it came down to three or four plays both ways,” Webb said. “At least that should have been a fourth-quarter game.”

Next up were the powerful, high-octane Oregon Ducks, back at Folsom. “I’m very excited about it,” he said during the game week. “Oregon’s a great team, and I hope they get the best from us.” At the team’s Broomfield hotel that Friday night, Webb was with his usual roommate, freshman linebacker Kenneth Olugbode, his backup on the depth chart. They tested each other on the defensive game plan, and then Olugbode set up his laptop and watched his San Jose high school, Bellarmine Prep, play via live streaming. They compared notes about their high school football experiences, and Webb felt old, realizing Olugbode was talking about the previous fall, while Webb was talking about 2008.

The next night, Oregon romped. The Buffs led 3-0 and 10-8, but the Ducks stormed back behind quarterback Marcus Mariota and were up 43-16 at the half and 57-16 after three quarters before coasting through a scoreless fourth quarter. The scary thing was that it would have been unfair to say the Buffs didn’t play well. They hung in there, but that’s how wide the talent gap was.

“I’m proud of the effort,” Webb said. He made eight tackles and was angry at himself for dropping a potential interception early, when he was coming up to play an anticipated screen — the blocking set up that way — and Mariota inexplicably threw the ball in his direction instead. “I was trying to get inside of the blocker and position myself to make a tackle, and the ball hit me right in the stomach,” he said, shaking his head. He did recover a fumble later in the game. “I made sure I got that one,” he said.

MAKING THE GRADES

Under MacIntyre, the Buffaloes’ routine was in line with an increasingly popular college football trend, with early morning meetings, as soon as 7 a.m., and then practice on lower campus fields down the hill and across Boulder Creek from the Dal Ward Center. After that, the players in theory were done with football for the day and head off to classes. Especially because of the flexibility and freedom tied to his graduation, Webb was able to build his schedule with his earliest class starting at 12:15 p.m. — Introduction to Theater on Tuesdays and Thursdays, with Latino Poetry following at 5:15. On Mondays, he had the Africana Studies class at 2 and the women in sports class at 3.

On the Monday after the Oregon game — the NCAA-enforced day off for players after film study and a “correction” practice on Sunday — the small second-floor auditorium in the Clare Small Arts and Sciences Building was standing-room-only for instructor Martin Atuire’s Africana Studies course. He opened with a welcome to his “brothers and sisters,” then went through an African dialect greeting and response with his students that seemed to be an entrenched routine by the second months of classes for his diverse group.

Webb sat on an aisle about halfway back and signed the roll-call sheet as it made the rounds. Scrawling across the blackboard, Atuire lectured, then showed a video and led a discussion about enslavement in the Americas. “That’s your history, your ancestry,” Webb said after class. “The whole point of that film was to remember your past. It’s pretty empowering to know of the people who endured so much.”

In the Duane Physics and Astrophysics Building basement, instructor Jenny Lind Withycombe, still a competitive rower and an acknowledged expert on women’s sports social issues with a doctorate in sports psychology, discussed the imbalance in coverage of men’s and women’s sports. She also showed a video, “Playing Unfair: The Media Image of the Female Athlete.”

The give-and-take among the students was spirited, and Webb joined in. At the end, Withycombe reminded them that they had an assignment due soon — to interview a female athlete and turn in the transcript. Derrick said his plan was to speak with his sister, BreAnna, who lives in Maryland and had just started skating on a roller derby team.

In his Tuesday classes, he was preparing to take part in a brief play in Theater class and learning about Latino poets.

On Oct. 12, Webb had seven tackles as the Buffs lost their third straight, to Arizona State 54-13 in what was their worst performance of the season. They were down 47-6 at halftime, and the final score could have been a lot worse. MacIntyre and his staff seemed to demonstrate that they would start looking to the future, and not just with the much-discussed move at quarterback, demoting Connor Wood and removing true freshman Sefo Liufau’s redshirt to install him as the starter.

The good news: Webb had finished his interview with BreAnna for Withycombe’s class. “I asked her about the whole experience of roller derby, how she prepares and whether she’d recommend it to other female athletes,” he said. “We talked about the double standard of women competing in physical sports.”

The bad news: Webb was on the field for only 25 plays as the Buffs beat Charleston Southern, the FCS replacement for Fresno State on the schedule, 43-10. Some of that was an attempt to get more players experience, but the Buffs also increasingly were experimenting with different packages, mainly going with just two linebackers and a nickel back. What that meant was that Webb more often was competing with the other outside linebacker starter, junior Woodson Greer III, for playing time.

As the game plan and practice work for Arizona the next week made it clear that Webb wasn’t ticketed to play much that week, either, MacIntyre had him, Wood and senior linebacker Paul Vigo stand at a team meeting. He praised them all for how they were handling reduced playing time and said he was proud of them.

Against Arizona on Oct 26, the Buffs opened on defense with Gillam and Greer at linebacker, and freshman Chidobe Uwuzie at nickel back. Webb was on for only 21 plays from scrimmage in the 44-20 loss. He consciously tried to be animated and supportive on the sideline, speaking with Gillam and Greer.

“The ups and downs,” Webb said the next week, smiling. “All you can do is support the decisions and be there to support the team. I was more disappointed in the outcome of the game than me not seeing more action.”

The next Tuesday, Oct. 29, MacIntyre said Webb would get more work in the practices that week and seemed to signal that Webb’s attitude had helped make the coaches realize the futility and even the unfairness of shunting seniors aside at that point — especially if one of the seniors was a much-respected and liked co-captain. “He’s handled it really well,” MacIntyre said. “He’s been a good leader and it’s fun watching him mature at that stage and working with him on it. This (past) week has been a big test for him and I thought he passed it with flying colors.”

That night, over dinner at the Dark Horse, Webb said he was determined to keep working hard and accept whatever happened. Since he lived next door, it wasn’t surprising that he was familiar with the menu on the wall next to the kitchen window and cash register and knew that wait service is available only during lunch. “I come here for the student deals,” he said. It also was obvious by now that at least during football season, while he isn’t a loner, he mostly hangs out with his teammates at the Dal Ward Center. Plus, it’s both a matter of time – he doesn’t have much – and finances. “Football and school is like 90 percent of my life right now,” he said. “Maybe even more than that.”

REBOUNDING

Back on the field, Webb had probably his best game of the season in a 45-23 loss to UCLA in the Rose Bowl on Nov. 2, getting a team-leading nine tackles. He and Gillam were the linebacker starters, with Awuzie still opening at nickel back. If a 22-point loss could be a moral victory, that was it, since the Buffs — who fell to 3-4 for the season and 0-4 in the Pac 12 — were competitive.

Webb wasn’t sure he was going to be back in the every-down rotation until game-time. “We shared reps,” he said back on campus a few days later. “The way I looked at is was that I had to prepare like I was going to start and be on the field. . . The coaches are going to do what they think is best for the team and I never took it personally.” He enjoyed the experience of playing in Pasadena for the second time in his career. “It’s awesome, everything about it,” he said. “Perfect weather, a great night for football, the field is just like a golf course.”

The next Monday, he felt he aced his Africana Studies midterm and then in the women in sports class mostly listened as Withycombe laid out a convincing argument that women college athletes were treated in condescending fashion in such things as media guides, with emphasis on them wearing something other than athletic garb in pictures, for example. Webb’s classmates included a few CU women athletes. He also felt good that the poem he wrote and read for the Tuesday-Thursday class in Latino Poetry was well-received.

But as this was all going on, he felt the clock winding down on his football career. “I can almost see my whole career flashing before my eyes,” he said. “Coming here as a freshman, all those camps, spring ball, fall camps, all those practices, all those games. And you realize, man, where did it all go?”

Because the NCAA had granted the Buffs a waiver due to the extraordinary circumstances, they could count both wins against FCS teams in the attempt to get to six wins and bowl eligibility, CU still had hope of going to a bowl game. The players, including Webb, spoke of that without a trace of self-consciousness while sensing most outsiders believed there was no way that was going to happen, since it would require three wins in the last four games. “There are a lot of great opportunities left on the field,” Webb said.

On Saturday, Nov. 9, CU’s 59-7 loss at Washington was a reminder of how far the Buffs still had to go to become even a middle-of-the-pack team in the Pac 12. Webb had eight tackles and, despite the result, seemed back in the full-time playing mode. Also, Greer was out with a shoulder injury suffered in practice that week, and it turned out that he was done for the season.

There was hope, though: Similarly downtrodden California, also winless in the conference, was coming into Folsom on Nov. 16. The Buffs beat the Golden Bears 41-24, and Webb and Gillam both had 11 tackles. With blustery winds, the weather was horrible and Webb fought through severe headaches and even declined a chance to go to the interview room to meet with the media after the game. He did consent to a one-on-one interview in the hallway outside the locker room, though. He was in agony.

“It kind of stuck with me,” he said of the headaches, then laughed darkly. “It’s still sticking with me. I think it was the cold and the wind blowing, more than anything. It wasn’t to the extent that I couldn’t play. I pulled myself through. These are the last three games of my career, and everybody out there was having so much fun, making plays on defense, doing their job, hitting on all cylinders.”

Derrick’s family awaits his arrival on the field during pregame Senior Day ceremony. Kathryn Scott Osler, Denver Post

SENIOR DAY AND FAMILY

Webb had one home game remaining – the Senior Day matchup with Southern California. The Buffs were planning on honoring 15 seniors, including six starters on offense and defense. On the defensive side of the ball, Webb was joined by safety Parker Orms, from Wheat Ridge, and end Chidera Uzo-Diribe.

On the Tuesday of game week, Webb talked about the upcoming weekend over dinner at Moe’s Original Bar B Que, on the other side of the Broker Inn. When he walked in, he waved to the crew in the kitchen, and the young woman in the Chicago Blackhawks T-shirt — the Avalanche was meeting “her” team that night in Denver — didn’t have to ask his name to put it onto the order. This quest for good barbeque is a big deal for Webb, and even more so for his mother, felicia. (”Moe’s?” she would ask later in the week. “OK, that’s pretty good.”)

“I’m excited about senior day for a couple of reasons,” Derrick said. “Number one, my family is coming out to see me for my final home game as a Buff. Two, it’s special because my grandfather (Harold Scott) is coming out here for his first Colorado game. He’s just been a huge inspiration for me, the biggest father figure for me in my life. He always was the disciplinarian, kept my head on straight and kept me in football.”

The family delegation flew into DIA on Friday, but was late enough to prevent Derrick from seeing everyone before he went to the team hotel. Then Saturday night, when it was his turn as the seniors were introduced, he ran into the field and handed flowers to his mother and greeted Harold Scott, in his wheelchair, plus BreAnna, her fiancee and her young son; Derrick’s stepfather, Billy Morris; and his uncle, Kevin Scott. “Leading up to it, I thought I was going to cry during the ceremony,” Derrick said later. “But when I was out there, it was all about being happy and proud, all smiles, not about tears.”

MacIntyre posed for pictures with Webb’s family and those of the other seniors, and the game was on. The 47-29 loss officially quashed the Buffs’ longshot bowl hopes. Webb spotted his family to the north side of the bench and had a team-high 11 tackles as the Buffs closed to within 40-29 with 3:19 remaining and then failed to recover an onside kick. They were overmatched, but not embarrassed.

Because of the cold, his grandfather had to go to the rental car at halftime. His mother and most of the rest of the family delegation stuck it out.

When it ended, Felicia made her way to the spot where the players would pass on their way to the dressing room. “I thought it was a good game,” she said as she waited. “I was very excited to see my son play. We were very excited to be here and it was great for Derrick to have a chance to play football here and for us to be a part of Buff nation.”

Felicia Morris had seen her son receive his diploma in the same stadium and she had seen him finish his home football career, and did it really matter than in Derrick’s four seasons of competition, his teams had won a total of …

No, in that context, there’s no reason to do the math.

Suddenly, Derrick was leaving the field and approaching the path to the Dal Ward Center. His mother waved and the security guard holding the rope, who previously had been adamant that he couldn’t let Felicia by, found cause to look the other way as she slipped past.

The hug between mother and son was a Kodak moment.

A little later in the interview room, Derrick told the media: “I feel like we left our heart out there today, and that was the most important thing for me.”

The next morning, Webb ate brunch with his family at the Omni Interlocken and then returned to Boulder.

There was one more game to play, at Utah. Looking ahead to that, MacIntyre said of Webb at his Tuesday news Conference: “I almost tear up thinking about it because he is a true, true warrior. I know that word is used a lot but, if you watch him play, he runs and hits. He gives everything he has. After practice and after games he is exhausted. He truly is the kid that you would say empties the bucket. . . We had a little bit there where we made some changes during the season and he came back and he didn’t bat an eye. He played really well the last couple games.”

On Thanksgiving, Webb walked over to the nearby house rented by redshirt freshman defensive lineman De’Jon Wilson, and a group of about seven Buffs had their choice of entrees – baked chicken or fried chicken. The delicacy side dish was macaroni and cheese. “For football players just cooking it up for Thanksgiving, it was actually a pretty good meal,” Webb said.

FINISHING UP

At Salt Lake, the Buffs fell again, 24-17, to Utah, finishing 4-8 overall and 1-8 in the Pac 12. Most frustrating for Webb, he suffered a “stinger” in the left shoulder and neck area about midway through the fourth quarter and had to leave the game. “They had a big, physical running back, and he got low, and I got low,” Webb said a few days later in CU’s University Memorial Center, sitting near the bust of noted cannibal Alferd E. Packer, for whom the student grill is named. “We both met in the backfield and I felt the shock. I’ve had stingers before and I’ve never come out of the game with a stinger. But this was my worst one. I’m fine now, but it took me a little longer to recover.”

He wanted to get back in, but the clock ran out before he could.

“Going into the game, there was less emotion than Senior Day,” he said. “Of course, I knew it was my last game and I knew I wanted to leave it all out there. I was going to play every down like it was my last game. After the game, that’s when the emotions hit.”

Yes, that means tears.

Later, he discovered he had finished the season with 99 tackles, second to Addison Gillam. “I wish I could have stayed in and got one more tackle and got to 100,” he said. “All I can do is laugh about that now.”

In the aftermath of that final game, MacInytre said of Webb: “He’s a great young man. He’s been exceptional ever since I got here and I’m pretty sure he was before I got here. He lifts your spirits. He’s that type of guy. He loves Colorado football and he loves playing football. He’ll have a great future at whatever he does.”

With the season over, Webb confided that one of the reasons he had handled his temporary demotion so well was that he had looked in the mirror after he couldn’t get on the field much as a backup linebacker in his freshman season under Hawkins.

“I feel I was prepared for going through the situation after having gone through it as a freshman,” he said. “I handled it the wrong way then. When I was in meetings or out on the practice field, I would never say anything to my (position) coach, ask any questions. I would sit around as quiet as I could and wouldn’t say anything to anybody. That wasn’t the way to go around handling it.

“When it came back around, I said, ‘I’m not going to get mad at anybody, I’m not going to walk around with a frown and change who I am, and start acting differently toward people.’ Sometimes when you’re mad and angry, you want people to know you’re mad and angry and you give off vibes that you’re mad. I learned from that. I just said, ‘Hey, what can I do to get better?’ It worked better for me this time.”

Webb said he would head home to Memphis after the term ended, then decide where to work out – and with whom to do it – to get ready for CU’s pro timing day during spring practice and hope for a shot in an NFL camp. His best chance is as a special teams ace — he loves playing on special teams — who could fill in on defense, but that’s probably a longshot.

“Coming into college, my two passions were football and music,” he said. “I would write music, rap songs, and I was passionate about it. I had a lot of fun doing that, and it would be a fun profession. But careers like that, along with professional sports, people think of it as a longshot. I give people my Plan A and my Plan B, and they say, ‘You need a Plan C.’ So if it comes to it, I’d like to be a business owner someday and give back to my community in some sort of way.”

Regardless of what he does, the college football experience will be a foundation.

A few weeks ago, I wrote this “What to watch” regarding Division I men’s basketball along on the Front Range. Editors could not find room in the print edition of The Denver Post, so thought I’d run it here.

Compared to a half-dozen years ago, men’s college basketball along the Front Range appears very much on the upswing with big crowds and important victories. Here are some things to keep tabs on during 2013-2014:

FINAL SEASON FOR DINWIDDIE?
At some point this winter, Colorado fans may start chanting, ‘One more year! One more year!” in a plea for 6-foot-6 point guard Spencer Dinwiddie to return for his senior season.

Some wondered if Dinwiddie might look into leaving for the NBA last spring following his sophomore year. But the Los Angeles native made just 41.5 percent of his field-goal attempts for 2012-13, hitting only 33.8 percent from 3-point range.

If Dinwiddie improves his shooting and also his assists-to-turnover ratio (it was 99 assists to 73 turnovers last season), he may well join Alec Burks (2011) and Andre Roberson (2013) as NBA first-round picks this spring. Pro scouts are said to love his potential.

That would make three first-rounders in four years from Colorado. Amazing.

BOULDER — Once Colorado’s season finale at Utah ends Saturday, the coaches will concentrate on recruiting. The Buffaloes expect to sign some junior college players, before a difficult landscape for Colorado coaches to maneuver.

“We are recruiting some,” coach Mike MacIntyre said at his weekly press luncheon Tuesday. “We have some coming in for a visit over the next couple weekends. So, we’ll know after those weekends just how many we will sign. Well, we only have room for eight guys to come in in January. I don’t think we’ll get to eight but, that’s all the room we have at this point because we have eight guys that are graduating in December.”

It’s easier for Colorado to recruit JCs, MacIntyre said, thanks to the NCAA. Before, some four-year schools could accept as many physical education credits as they wanted. Today, they can only transfer two PE credits, leveling the field for schools such as Colorado.

The Colorado State men’s basketball program received its third commitment of the current recruiting cycle this week when 6-foot-3 guard Gian Clavell decided to become a Ram, according to the rivals.com affiliate GoldandGreenNews.com.

Originally from Puerto Rico, Clavell finished his high school career in Miami, Fla. Last season, he averaged 19.4 points, 6.7 rebounds and four assists as a freshman at Northwest Technical College in Goodland, Kan., just 18 miles from the Colorado-Kansas border.

Kensler joined The Denver Post in 1989 and has covered a variety of beats, including Colorado, Colorado State, golf, Olympics and the Denver Broncos. His brush with greatness: losing in a two-on-two pickup basketball game at Ohio State against two-time Heisman Trophy winner Archie Griffin.

Terry Frei graduated from Wheat Ridge High School in the Denver area and has degrees in history and journalism from the University of Colorado-Boulder. He worked for the Rocky Mountain News while attending CU and joined the Post staff after graduation. He has also worked at the Oregonian in Portland, Ore., and The Sporting News. His seventh book, March 1939: Before the Madness, was issued in February 2014.